schools or clinics in most of the villages. This harms the rights of some 37,000 residents who
live in the 30 unrecognized villages without any education or health service. It harms their
right to equality and all because of obstacles in planning.
The law as a discriminatory tool
Israeli policy over the years has continually sought to obtain lands previously used by the
Galilee and Negev Bedouin and to register them in the name of the state.
Legal
machinations have featured prominently in this exercise. Israeli governments have made use
of the law as a tool for expropriation of lands, for the dispossession of the indigenous
Bedouin population and the negation of their property rights, and for the judaization of these
lands. The process goes as follows: the state first registers the lands and arranges their
planning and zoning status, and then it transfers those lands to various organizations charged
essentially with judaizing the area.
All this is made possible through various land
expropriation laws, such as the Absentee's Property Law (1950), Land Acquisition
(Validation of Acts and Compensation) Law (1953), and Acquisition of Land in the Negev
Law (1980).
Infringement of the Right to Housing
The direct result of the state's discriminatory planning policies is that it is impossible to
receive legal building permits in any of the unrecognized villages. Without building permits or
fair settlement alternatives, the Bedouin residents have no choice but to build illegally without
permits. Thus, it is no wonder that the threat of house demolitions hang constantly over their
heads, and in fact dozens of residents each year do lose their homes to demolition and are
left without a roof over their heads.
Israel's policy of house demolitions has become a common phenomenon in the Negev.
Earlier this year, the Ministry of Interior, Israeli Land Authority and the police commander
of the southern region aggressively decided to triple the number of houses that will be